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The phrase "a thicket with" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a dense area of vegetation or bushes that contains something, often in a descriptive context.
Example: "We stumbled upon a thicket with vibrant wildflowers blooming amidst the tangled branches."
Alternatives: "a grove containing" or "a cluster featuring".
Exact(2)
As a result, skiers started pursuing straighter lines, thrashing through the hinged poles in the manner of an explorer cutting through a thicket with a machete.
We are fertilizing a thicket with 0, 10, 20 and 50 kg nitrogen (N) ha−1 yr−1 in central Spain.
Similar(58)
Surpassingly ugly — every frame appears to have been marinated in ditch water, then dragged through a thicket — and with a soundtrack that suggests feeding time at the pound, the movie strains for terror and achieves only confusion.
Take six giant steps and you're in Indo-Asia -- tufts of lemon grass, pale tubes of the intoxicatingly fragrant 10-cent flowers (used in making leis), the big blowsy purple blooms of a Hong Kong orchid tree, and cinnamon, turmeric and clove trees in a thicket flashing with tiny rice birds.
During April, Mr. Held's garden is a dense thicket, with primroses at their peak bearing deep green leaves with notched edges and flower spires in white, pink and purple.
It was like a thicket of percussion, with Mr. O'Farrill's fourths on the piano and his own jabbing trombone lines as added percussive elements.
But Stephen Myler was not in the pocket; Myler wanted a conversion, preferably from a try scored by the narrowest of margins among a thicket of bodies with time up on the clock.
The Web site will compete with a thicket of others, including digital versions of People and Us Weekly magazines, along with very robust Web sites like TMZ, PopEater, Wonderwall, PerezHilton, E Online and OMG!
Faced with a thicket of legs and sticks, she poked the ball past a diving Antoniska.
The present structure is Soviet in its complexity, with a thicket of fees laid down for different services.
"Wire Cat," another mobile, contrasts a plain rectangular grid with a thicket of pointy rods and ties.
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